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[Used] with a dative. [Meaning] I am tired out.[1]
"But he being in the last stage of life had grown old and seemed to have renounced its troubles."[2]
And elsewhere: "because of this, you see, the Medes have renounced the treaties of peace, and again their love of war is rekindled."[3]
Also [sc. attested is] ἀπειρήκει ["I had renounced"], [from] ἀπειρήκειν , [meaning] to disown; for it too is first person.[4]
Also [sc. attested is the participle] ἀπειρηκυῖα ["having renounced"], [meaning] having disowned,[5] and ἀπειρήκεσαν ["they had renounced"].[6]

[1] Same glossing in other lexica. If this headword is actually quoted from somewhere (rather than simply being paradigmatic), there are instances in Xenophon, Plato, and elsewhere.
[2] Agathias, Histories 5.14 (p.306 Niebuhr).
[3] Theophylact Simocatta, Histories 3.15.9; cf. mu 811.
[4] The first person singular pluperfect would be better spelled ἀπειρήκη , as at Plato, Phaedo 99D. The third person singular could be ἀπειρήκει or ἀπειρήκειν . In the Synagogeἀπειρήκη is glossed with the words ἀπειρήκειν καὶ ἀπηγορεύθην: ἔστι γὰρ ἀπρόσωπον ("ἀπειρήκειν [pluperfect, third person] and ἀπηγορεύθην [aorist passive, first person]: for it is impersonal"). Evidently pluperfect forms were confusing even then.
[5] Feminine nominative singular of this perfect participle, perhaps from Menander, Perikeiromene 131.
[6] Instances in Xenophon, [Demosthenes] and elsewhere.